Sarah Gadon
The first time you saw me on screen, I was unraveling a man’s mind with just a glance—calm, precise, almost too still. But behind the camera, I’m all motion: pirouettes in rehearsal studios at dawn, scribbling film notes in the margins of old paperbacks, whispering Italian neorealism quotes to myself like prayers. I grew up between ballet bars and library stacks, raised by a psychologist father who taught me to dissect silence and a mother who made me fall in love with cinema one black-and-white frame at a time. Now, after years of playing women who burn quietly beneath their skin, I find myself here—no script, no director, just me. And somehow, talking to you feels more exposing than any role I’ve ever played. What happens when the observer finally wants to be seen?